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Hoarders

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Hoarders

Contributors:

By (Author) Kate Durbin

ISBN:

9781950268139

Publisher:

Wave Books

Imprint:

Wave Books

Publication Date:

12th July 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

811.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

184

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 209mm

Description

A Lit Hub Most Anticipated Book of 2021
An NPR Best Book of 2021
An Electric Literature Best Poetry Book of 2021
A Dennis Cooper Best Book of 2021


ultimately embraces with sympathy the difficulty and complexity of the human condition.

Reviews

Durbins work has what the A&E show lacks: a capacious sense of humanity, a nuanced understanding of how consumerism might shape compulsions, and a deeply expressed empathy for the subtleties of life under capitalismIn this reinvention, each characters own narration takes precedence over the more salacious details of their disorder, bringing us into their personal, sometimes painful, worlds. Each poem consists of connected fragments, little piles. Each stanza reads like a conversation between the person and their stuffThe poems themselves are cluttered, yet their vibrancy is hard to overstate. Durbin astutely marries content and meaning, overwhelming the reader while dialing into our internal monstrous consumer. Alyse Burnside, The Atlantic


Its Durbins exquisitely fine-tuned attention that is thrown into new relief in Hoarders, a book that chronicles the lived experiences of people who cannot let go of things, and the things that glow under the attention of being witnessed and inventoried by Durbins vivid and heartbreaking renderings. Emily Skillings, The Believer


Hoarders, Durbins newest collection, is a look at and through the documentary series of the same name, to the the secret life of American objects. It shows how we are formed with, by, and through our relationships with our stuff which haunts and is haunted in equal measure. It is a powerful, beautiful, and deeply unsettling book. Kyle Williams, Full Stop


Television wants to provide a tidy narrativedirty home transformed into clean home, sad changed to happy. But Durbins curations, inventions, and re-imaginings allow this material to transcend its form, and the result is a fascinating collection about connection, desire, and what it means to be American. Chelsea Hodson, Lit Hub


In centering imperfect, struggling shopaholics more likely to amass cheap dresses from TJ Maxx than hit up Rodeo Drive, Durbin provides insight into the most dysfunctional realms of consumer culture Sandra Simonds, Poetry Foundation


Though the swift-moving spectacle of the television show invites viewers to cast easy judgment on these hoarders, Durbin employs poetry's slower speed to show a more complicated picture. Instead of using [their stories] to make us feel better about ourselves for not being hoarders, she indicts aspects of American culture we all participate inreligion, capitalismand reveals our complicity, all the while dropping a lot of sight gags in the process. Rich Smith, The Stranger


From what I presume is an abundance of hoarded material on the reality TV show, [Durbin] isolates these stunning and evocative tableaux that feel very moving, memento mori, and in a way treat the hoarded material with the care and dignity that many of the hoarders espouse. JoAnna Novak, Los Angeles Review of Books


Like another marvelous Wave book, Chelsey Minniss Baby, I Dont Care, Durbins Hoarders is energized by the joyous single mindedness of the poet and her subjects. Ronnie from Las Vegas sums it up: I feel sorry for so-called normal people chair with a paper sign taped to it that says Seat Where Buzz Aldrin Sat in blue Sharpie. -David Starkey, California Review of Books


An absurd, bracingly funny depiction of the misery of consumerismbut also something tenderer, about the attachments that make up a life. Lit Hub, Most Anticipated Books of 2021


Hoarders isspare andheartbreaking. Katharine Coldiron, BOMB


It's by zooming into objects and slowing down time that Durbin makes her book so different from what you see on TV. In the show Hoarders, it can feel like the goal is to fix everyone really quickly, by the end of each episode. But with her poems, Durbin doesn't want to resolve anything for the reader. She simply wants to stop and listen to whatever the people and their objects have to say. NPR, Morning Edition


Hoarders reckons with the collective alienation that is part of our culture. [It] is a striking union of cultural critique with poetic meditation. The poems here offer an unflinching view of a culture centered around consumption and spectacle, while imploring us to move with kindness through the world. CD Eskilson, The Arkansas International

Author Bio

Kate Durbin is a Los Angeles-based writer and artist. Her books of poetry include E! Entertainment, The Ravenous Audience, and ABRA, which won the 2017 international Turn On Literature Prize. Durbin was the Arts Queensland Poet-in-Residence in Brisbane, Australia in 2015. Her art and writing have been featured in The New York Times, Art in America, Art Forum, The Believer, BOMB, poets.org, The American Poetry Review, and elsewhere. She has shown her artwork nationally and internationally at The Frye Museum in Seattle, The Pulse Art Fair in Miami, MOCA Los Angeles, The Spring Break Art Fair in Los Angeles, Peer to Space in Berlin, and more.

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